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NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 Kernel Panics/Freezes in Lion & late Snow Leopard

I've found some other reports of these freezes scattered about the forums, but usually other people come in and post something about unrelated video cards. So this thread is specific to NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 running OS X Lion (10.7-10.7.3), to avoid confusion and cross-polination of different issues.


Hardware Overview:


Model Name: iMac

Model Identifier: iMac9,1

Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo

Processor Speed: 3.06 GHz

Number of Processors: 1

Total Number of Cores: 2

L2 Cache: 6 MB

Memory: 8 GB

Bus Speed: 1.07 GHz

Boot ROM Version: IM91.008D.B08

SMC Version (system): 1.37f3


NVIDIA GeForce GT 130:


Chipset Model: NVIDIA GeForce GT 130

Type: GPU

Bus: PCIe

PCIe Lane Width: x16

VRAM (Total): 512 MB

Vendor: NVIDIA (0x10de)

Device ID: 0x062e

Revision ID: 0x00a1

ROM Revision: 3370



Since upgrading to Lion I have had many issues with crashes and kernel panics characterized by the following symptoms, listed here in detail so that people can find them when they search:


  • Pixellation - colored pixels appear in different areas of the screen, in seemingly random bunches.
  • Mosaics - squares appear redrawn in the wrong part of the screen. Sometimes these squares are large, other times tiny.
  • Recovery - sometimes the system recovers once it starts doing these. Other times it just keeps going until it freezes/panics.
  • Kernel Panics - I've only had the "grey screen" appear once or twice. Usually there is a complete system lockup before this can happen, and I have to reboot the system manually.


Some solutions/attempts to solve:


  • Turn off Energy Saving - This is horrible for the monitor and can lead to burn-in, but I found that many of my crashes occured when the system was trying to recover from "screen sleep". So now I run a screen saver instead, which doesn't seem to trigger it as much.
  • Screen Saver - Sometimes I can "refresh" the system by turning on the screen saver and then coming back. Other times, this doesn't work and the pixellation/mosaic remains. Sometimes I can't even initialize the screen saver at all (in which case a total freeze usually occurs right after).
  • Rebooting - seems to clear things up for a while, but inevitably, the problem resurfaces.
  • Running Windows - Not really a solution, but I have had absolutely no issues with this behavior while running Windows 7 on this same machine (under Bootcamp).
  • Downgrading to Snow Leopard - I have not attempted this, but I've read others say that their crashes went away when they did. I would like some more concrete evidence on this if anyone has it.


My diagnosis so far:


OS X Lion's NVIDIA driver kernel extensions (kexts) seem to be faulty with this GPU. The Windows drivers for this GPU work better on Apple's own hardware than OS X Lion's. Anectodal evidence indicates that Snow Leopard's drivers (at least up to 10.6.3 – more confirmation needed) do not display this issue. I can confirm that this never occurred in Snow Leopard until Lion was released and I upgraded to it.


My request for help and information:


  • If you are running this GPU (GeForce GT 130) and OS X Lion, please contribute to this thread offering any solutions you may have or, at the very least, listing your hardware and GPU profile.
  • If you can, post crash logs so that we can compare common issues (NVDA Resman seems to be a huge recurring kext in the crash logs, for instance).
  • Post screen shots or pictures taken of the pixellation (colored pixels) and mosaic (squares drawn in the wrong place) phenomenon, so we can build a body of evidence regarding this issue. I will continue to update this thread with the same.


I feel Apple has ignored these issues for far too long, and required too many people to simply purchase new computers and new GPUs. If we can build a solid body of evidence regarding this specific issue, it will be a thread that Apple Support can be referred to.

iMac, Mac OS X (10.7.3), 3.06 Ghz (Early 2009 – iMac9,1)

Posted on May 9, 2012 8:15 AM

Reply
468 replies

Mar 10, 2013 1:56 PM in response to Mudhut

Have you tried switching to the Dock's Scale effect instead of Genie, to see if that reduces the amount of crashes per day? It seems like the number of operations involved in displaying a Genie effect would be much more than that involved in scaling a rectangle. Of course, this isn't a solution by any means, I'm just thinking of ways to crash less until you can get it fixed.

Mar 10, 2013 2:54 PM in response to David Portela

It isn't normally to do with the genie effect as it is normally from opening a new finder pane. It just happened that on this occasion the crash happened during the Genie effect.


Overall, are we saying that a new graphics card is the repair that is required or is there software required to go with it? I use this mac for work and would just like the thing to work and stop wasting my time rebooting it.

Mar 11, 2013 4:45 AM in response to Mudhut

Overall, are we saying that a new graphics card is the repair that is required or is there software required to go with it? I use this mac for work and would just like the thing to work and stop wasting my time rebooting it.

Mudhut, I got the video card replaced in the local Apple shop (Liverpool). It was exactly the same card, same video bios versaion etc. Fixed the immediate damage, but on running Mountain Lion found that the lockups started again, so went back to Snow Leopard to avoid permanent damage. So I think that a new graphic card was not a fix for me.


When this imac first came out there was also an ATI choice of video card, I would bet money that be moving from the Nvidia GT130 to this would be a fix

Mar 11, 2013 5:24 AM in response to Will Moindrot

Will,

I am curious, did you go to an official Apple store or an "authorized" Apple repair center. We have several places here that sell and repair Apple computers. I have used one for an old laptop repair and they charged me more and used old parts from another comptuer.


If your repair shop just took the card from someone else's computer, then the problem is still there. The model on my new card is the same. I have not had any problems running Mountain Lion.


The one program that I no longer run on that computer is Parallels. I used to have a virtual machine running WinXP.

Mar 11, 2013 5:35 AM in response to Ramona Adams

Hi Ramona, spurred on from your experience I took it to Genius Bar at the local offical Apple store. I can only think that it was a brand new replacement. I could reliably cause problem to become apparent again when scrolling through index view of photos in iPhoto'11 (I think must be quite intensive in terms of scaling the photos and had 100s of pics). Gone back to Snow Leopard and don't seem to have any problems (touch wood)

Mar 11, 2013 5:59 AM in response to Will Moindrot

My Apple store part was guaranteed for 90 days. If you can recreate the problem, they should replace the replacement card. Maybe, the card they used was old or something.


I know it's annoying. I could make the problem happen by opening any kind of video. But, my problem started on Snow Leopard. Before getting a new video card, I replaced the hard drive and memory, wiped the computer clean and re-installed original Leopard from CD, then updated to Snow Leopard. Leopard ran ok, but Snow Leopard still caused me problems.


I was not running iPhoto. I use Aperture. The one true test for me was opening two videos (youtube) at the same time. Also, the computer had to warm up a bit before it would fail.


This is a complex issue which is probably a combination of hardware and software. At first, I was linking it to Parallels since I updated that program just before Lion came out as well. But others, haven't said anything about running virtual machines.


The really frustrating part of the whole episode is that you can't even sell the computer if it doesn't work properly. My guess is that Apple will only guarantee the hardware to work on the original operating system that came with it (Leopard). Like most people, I have not read the software terms when updating the computer.


Good luck to everyone with their issues.


BTW, I have a newer Macbook Pro and have noticed more crashes with Lion using some graphic intensive applications. I have about 50K photos in Aperture and sometimes it crashes. It's not the same, but there are kernel panics in Mountain Lion on other computers...just not as often. My iMac was not usable.

Mar 11, 2013 11:00 AM in response to Ramona Adams

Hi Ramona, I've had the same problems too, started last year in late summer just when I started to use paralles, but I probably also updated Lion then...


After I found this forum I started using smcFanControl as suggested and stopped using Safari, with Lion 10.7.5 which deffenitly gave me less crashes.


I won't update to Moutain Lion untik this issue is fixed...

Mar 14, 2013 6:36 PM in response to David Portela

Hello, I have exactly the same problem as you. Do u solve this problem out? How is your machine going on now? Right now, I already booked a reservation for genius bar to check my machine next tuesday, but I think Apple store should fix this problem for us totally for free, as this is Apple's problem. Could you please recommend me some advice about this situation? Should I argue with Apple to fix this problem for free or just let them charge me to fix? Please let me know, thank you so much.



James

Mar 15, 2013 5:13 AM in response to amandreamartino

Hello, could you please let me know how to operate like u said for Mountain Lion? I don't really understand your way to solve this problem. After I upgrade to 10.8.2, how to upgrade my graphic card drive and the kext files? So now you machine is not crashing any more, right? Could you please teach me how to do that?? Because I really do not want to pay money for Apple's fault. I truly think that Apple should fix this problem for us totally free. Thank you very much.


James

Mar 15, 2013 5:24 AM in response to youclavier

James,


No, the issue is not solved. I am still waiting to hear back from Apple after providing them with my nearest repair center, to begin coordinating the repair. I will update this thread when the repair is complete.


No KEXT fix or driver upgrade has been found that fixes this particular issue, and all workarounds have ended up failing eventually as the problem gets worse.


- David

Mar 18, 2013 7:38 PM in response to David Portela

Been browsing this thread and I believe my issue is related to the same problem this thread is having although a different display of problems. I too own an Early 2009 iMac w/ GT 130 card running ML.


I don't get weird pixels or distortion on screen as others have, my problem is that my iMac shuts off by itself. Like somebody pulled the cord. It occurs commonly using an internet browser, doesnt matter which one. also occurs using any Adobe Creative Suite app, especially Photoshop. I first thought it was bad RAM, so I reinstalled the OEM RAM but same issue. Thought maybe software. Created a new user account, same issue. Thought bad power supply, installed new one, same issue. Then I thought bad HDD? Installed OEM HDD which was still running SL. No shut down! At this point I thought, great easy fix, just a bad HDD just need to buy a new one. So just decided to make sure it was a bad HDD, so upgraded the OEM HDD all the way to ML... and then shut off reoccurs on the OEM HDD. So now I know it has to do w/ ML upgrade. Which makes sense now since problems started after upgrading to ML on the other HDD.


Haven't read all 16 pages just yet, but figured I'd contribute to what I'm going thru for the past few months.


Oliver

Mar 19, 2013 10:28 AM in response to David Portela

I'd like to add screen shots to this thread:

24-inch, Early 2009

Processor 3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo

Memory 8 GB 1067 MHz DDR3

Graphics NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 512 MB

Software OS X 10.8.2 (12C60)

Note: these recent images are after installing smcFan running at aprox. 34C, 2190rpm.

User uploaded file

After the system has been running all day and gone into extended sleep mode. This occures at wakeup.

User uploaded file

This is Safari. This happens less often but...

Mar 19, 2013 1:56 PM in response to celloist

Regarding the first screen shot: I've had that problem on both my iMac and Laptop, usually after waking from sleep. It started happening, or I first noticed it, after upgrading my RAM to 8GB from OWC. So I'm not sure that one is the same problem.


Regarding the main topic: Add my name to the list of the afflicted. Usually happens when my kids are playing Minecraft or watching YouTube.


iMac 24" Early 2009

3.06 GHz Core 2 Duo

NVIDIA GT 130 512MB


I can keep it from crashing if I can keep the tempurature around 100F.

Mar 19, 2013 4:14 PM in response to David Portela

I sent my iMac to Apple store last Sunday and the Genius Bar staff saw my freeze and crash problem. The technician said he would fix this problem in a couple of days. I really hope they can really fix it within such a short period and they only charge me $42 labor fees. Now is 3 days passes, maybe they will give me a call before this Friday I think. Do u get back your iMac or still in the fixing process?

NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 Kernel Panics/Freezes in Lion & late Snow Leopard

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